Canine Noses May Sniff Out Seizures

November 27, 2009 RSS Feed Print

RICK HARRISON,
Republican-American

WATERBURY, Conn.—Five or 10 minutes before Shelly Ryan has a seizure, her hands might tremble or her head begin to ache with migraine pain. Or she might also get an even earlier warning: licked hands.

Bouncer, Ryan's 2-year-old yellow Labrador, can sense something wrong with her owner. Sometimes 15 or 20 minutes before the onset of seizures Ryan has suffered for six years after multiple back operations, Bouncer will approach her and obsessively lick her hand. Or put her paws on Ryan's lap and lick her cheek.

"Now I go lie down," said Ryan, a 34-year-old Wolcott resident. "When she gives me the sign, I go lie down."

Bouncer, who received no formal training in this type of behavior, is one of a growing number of so-called "seizure dogs," who either alert their owners of an oncoming episode or help them cope with the danger and its aftermath. A spokeswoman for Assistance Dogs International, a trade group for service dog organizations with 160 member groups worldwide, said 31 groups currently offer seizure alert and response dogs, and requests for them rise every year.

Researchers disagree about what drives the dogs' behavior, but service dog trainers agree that man's best friend can often do more than retrieve slippers and slobber on the morning paper.

"We hope in the bonding process that alerting begins," said Frances Rosemeyer, program coordinator at Canine Assistants in Georgia, a nonprofit organization that trains and provides service dogs. "That's not a trainable command, it's like a sense. It's a sixth sense."

Rosemeyer said her organization trains all service dogs to respond to the same 90 commands, allowing them to assist people with a range of physical disabilities to operate light switches, open and close doors, retrieve items and press buttons. And some dogs placed with people prone to seizures will become aware of cues that precede an episode.

"In terms of seizures, we just realized that dogs had this ability," Rosemeyer said, adding that her group places about 70 dogs a year, with 1,000 in service. "Those that have that ability will give some warning that a seizure is coming. The dog decides what that warning is."

Some will bark or paw the floor or approach their owners and nudge them to a chair.

Trainers condition them to sit or lie quietly by their owners or even call for help. Ryan recalled a time visiting her sister when her sister's dog climbed up on top of her and wouldn't let her go.

"About 20 minutes later I went into a seizure," Ryan said. "I was like, 'Oh, my lord.'"

Roger Reep, a professor of neuroscience at the University of Florida, worked on a preliminary study in 1998 and concluded that dogs are using their extraordinarily keen senses of smell to sniff out hard-to-perceive internal body odors brought associated with seizures.

"Any time something as fundamental as your brain wave changes, it makes sense that would trigger an autonomic response," Reep said of the body's nervous system controlling organs and things like sweat glands.

Dogs' noses have long been used to hunt for escaped convicts, lost children, buried bodies, illegal drugs or explosives.

Now they are being trained to detect diabetes and cancer.

Deborah Dalziel, one of Reep's partners for the seizure dog study, counseled caution for anyone seeking to train or purchase a dog to help cope with seizures.

"Not everyone can work with a service dog," Dalziel said, stressing the difficulty faced by owners with multiple health problems and the need to understand how to issue commands, continuously train, and recognize the messages behind a dog's behavior. "You have to learn to trust that animal. Because your life is literally in their paws."

The Epilepsy Foundation warns people to review the claims of trainers, who unlike Canine Assistance's free service, might charge thousands of dollars for a seizure dog. Reep and Dalziel suggested people who are desperate can fall prey to people either looking to make money or operating without the necessary rigorous training.

Darlene Sullivan, executive director of the nonprofit Canine Partners for Life in Pennsylvania, said her group has 15 years' experience in identifying service dogs who have the characteristics to detect seizures and reinforcing the instinct. But they don't actively teach detection in their twoyear training program.

"We tended to notice these were extremely intelligent dogs that bonded with their people," Sullivan said. "I call them dogs that never slept. They close their eyes, but if the wind blows, they'll be open."

For Ryan, the extra warning can mean the difference between making it to the safety of her car's front seat or a hard trip to the floor. A few years ago, before she rescued Bouncer from a pound, a seizure struck without warning while she was shopping at a cell phone store with her children.

She struck the floor with her head.

"I'm extremely lucky to have her," Ryan said of Bouncer.

"She's a wonderful pet. She's a great family dog. I don't know what we'd do without her."

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Information from: Republican-American, http://www.rep-am.com

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Tags:
seizures,
dogs,
science,
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Where is the best place to find good seizure dogs?

karen kaback of NY 8:58AM June 19, 2011

Who needs a genetic scan? It is obvious from puppyhood if a dog is going to know when you are sick. I have had a dog for diabetes for 14 years who is retired now as he is deaf at 15 and losing some vision. Still his nose is as good as when he was 2 years as he bothers me constantly before my blood sugar hits really low so I test my blood. He definitely knows when it is dropping. I have since purchased a pup that a certified service dog trainer is training wth me to do the same thing. This pup is only nine months and he knows when I am getting sick.My first was a poodle mix and this pup is a poodle mix. Seems to work every time for me(cockapoo, goldendoodle). Places charge $25,000 for a dog for diabetes but any good trainer can do such as long as the owner trains the dog also each day.

AM

Annie of MA 1:59PM January 22, 2010

Has anyone run a genetic scan on these dogs vs dogs that don't detect seizures? Maybe from the same litter?

SDN of TX 8:13AM December 03, 2009

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